This is an article I wrote in 2000 for the GCN General Board on IGN way back when I was 12. It's about why I think diseases and viruses serve a very real purpouse and don't exist just to cause death and destruction. I revised it a year and a half later for PGC when they were still on EZBoards, although much of the writing stayed the same. I then revised it yet again (mainly a few rewordings to better get across my point) earlier this year to post on IGN once more. There's been a lot of new users here, so I've decided I'll post it here again for their benefit. I realise it's a long article, nearly 1,500 words, made all the longer by this unnecessarily wordy intro, but I think if you read the entire thing it will at least get your brain working. Hope you enjoy it.
For all eternity, or at least the period in which humans have existed, diseases and viruses have always been looked upon as a burden, as something that exists only to cause pain and anguish. I, however, propose a different and original theory for their existence. One that may not be all that orthodox, but certainly makes sense to me.
First let me preface it with a simple fact- the human race is overpopulated, too numerous, to put it simply. Our planet is incapable of not only containing 6 billion humans, but supporting them as well. In our roughly 30,000 years of existence in our current state (Homo sapiens), we have overrun the world with our presence. We've destroyed countless species' habitats, caused countless others to go extinct- basically our kind has wreaked havoc upon the Earth. What is now a small field nestled near a quiet little town could be a bustling mini mall within a much larger town several years later. In short, humans as a whole have a reckless disregard for nearly anything other than themselves. Granted many oppose this notion, but the fact cannot be denied that we as a whole care only for ourselves. Don't get me wrong- I'm not trying to preach to you the wonders of recycling and conservation. I'm mearly proving a point; a point I think which no one can claim is false. Without any natural predators, the human race has gone beyond the boundaries that contain us and keep us in order. But I think that we are not without a predator born from the wild.
I think you're all familiar with the food chain, or the food web, if you're picky about it. Basically, smaller animals are eaten by larger animals, more or less, the entire way up until you reach the human race who sits at the top. With this known, we automatically assume we have no natural predators. Rather I think the food "chain" is really a loop- in other words, it "loops" back in on itself, putting our natural predator as a very small being. I'd think diseases, one of the smallest known organisms, fit this bill quite nicely. Our connection with diseases, viruses, and of the such, would work like any other parasitic predator/prey relationship.
But first, let me explain the concept of population control as provided by Mother Nature. Take a deer and wolf population, if you will, on in a secluded forest untouched by humanity. Obviously, the wolves hunt the deer, thus keeping their population in check. Contrary to what you may believe, this is very precisely calculated process. If the wolves underhunt the deer, the deer's population will quickly grow too large to be supported by the forest. The deer will overgraze and eat all the available food and nourishment in the area faster than they can regrow. This, in effect, causes the deer to starve to death since they've eaten all of their food. Without deer to support them, the wolves in turn die out in the forest as well. However, if the wolves overhunt the deer, they bypass the overgrazing and go straight to killing off the deer population faster than they can make a comeback. This kills off the deer, which kills off the wolves as well, due to lack of food. Thus the way wolves hunt is nowhere near random, albeit varied. If the deer population gets too big, the wolves will increase their number of kills to bring it back down to a manageable level, all without knowing it. If the deer population suddenly drops, he wolves will back off on their number of kills so as not to endanger the deer. It's a process that has been occurring for 4 billion years and looks as if to leave no one species as an exception, and that includes the humans.
This is where diseases enter. THEY are responsible for keeping OUR population in check. With our recent surge in population, similarly a serge has been seen in newer and deadlier diseases, which threaten our population justly, for we are too numerous. Mind you diseases are not programmed, in a sense, to kill, however. Since this is a parasitic relationship, with us as the parasites' hosts, a well-evolved disease will not kill its victim. Since parasites can not feed off of a dead host, a dead host is of no use to them. You'll notice very old diseases have little or no effect on us now, while it's almost entirely the more recent diseases that cause most of the deaths. Of course, this doesn't stop diseases from killing us. Once one becomes accustomed to humans, another one jumps to take its "place" as the overseer of our population, basically to control it.
But I'm straying from the issue, which is diseases as a population control, in which a very famous example proves I think most of you are familiar with. Take the Black or Bubonic Plague, which ravaged Europe in the 1300's and London in the 1600's. Europe at that time was extremely crowded and overpopulated. Simply put, there were too many people, which in turn made living conditions inhumane. Then, unexpected and unwelcome, a quick spreading and very deadly disease strikes. It quickly moves across almost all of Europe, killing off a third of its population at the time, and has become one of the deadliest diseases to ever strike man. After 3 or 4 years, it ran its course, leaving a wake of utter destruction in its path. More bads are pulled from this than goods, though. I believe the prime reason the plague showed up was to cutdown the population of Europe, in which it succeeded marvelously. Without the plague, Europe would most likely have the worst living conditions in the world right now. The plague's effect might not have been immediate, but over the course of time, it has been unknowingly appreciated. As I stated, the Black Plague also struck later in London, which was also vastly overpopulated at the time, but instead of letting the disease run it's course, hence thinning down the population, it was stopped abruptly by a massive fire that killed nearly all of the plague carrying rats, and the evidence of it's premature foreclosure is evident today.
All this brings me to a major point- medical advancements in the last century have gone to protect us from most diseases currently alive and otherwise deadly. Medical research has artificially lengthened our ages, and I say artificially because without this medical research, we'd all most likely be dead by age 30, less in some places. The art of medicine has eradicated entire diseases and viruses, never to be seen again. This, in my opinion, is the foremost reason our race is overpopulated today, because we are conquering our only natural predators. It would be very akin to the deer killing off the wolf pack, thus killing themselves through starvation later on. We, the deer, are getting rid of our predators, the wolves, which is a grave mistake. Without them we will run rampant across our planet, and already have to some extent. Through our efforts to extend our lives, we have essentially brought about our own doom. The recent surge in new and extremely deadly diseases has shown Mother Nature is throwing everything she’s got as us, in essence as punishment for our selfishness, if you will. But we accept these challenges and in turn defeat them. We are ridding ourselves not of a burden to our race but our savior, the one thing that keeps our existence steady and eternal.
Eventually I believe a massive plague of proportions unimaginable will attack our species, finally succeeding where it has failed so many times before. I believe our population will be greatly reduced, at most perhaps by several billion, but more realistically in the hundreds of millions, and the toll will not only be upon our numbers but our psyche as well, bringing down nearly all of the technological advancements we've made in the last 1,000 years. It will be like the burning of the Library of Alexandria, except on an epic scale, that will set back civilization much further than four or five hundred years. It is a bleak future to look forward to- although far off on human terms, it is foreboding on the horizon on geological terms. A massive disease, our natural predators, will inevitably succeed in its sole duty.
I would like you all to know now that although I believe my theory is true, I don't necessarily believe in upholding it. I've always been one to get the most out of everything, and that includes life. So I’m not out to leave the sick and elderly to die, and while I don't see the good in holding off the inevitable that doesn’t mean we can't improve our lives by at least trying.
-mouse_clicker